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Inside SwellPath: The Mobile Office

Published May 11th, 2011 SwellPath 1 Comment

In this ongoing series by co-founder John Koenig (@johnpkoenig), we’ll take a look inside the walls of SwellPath and discuss life as a Portland start-up.

We often talk about the work we do and not necessarily about how that works gets done. The product you create is a product of a team, process and environment that creates it.

The SwellPath office is part of our environment, but it’s also a bit of a novelty. Of course we need a place to hold meetings, events and play foosball but in a connected world, it’s easier to IM than to stand up and walk across the office. We built SwellPath to be mobile. If our office burnt down tomorrow, we’d hardly skip a beat.

Here are the basics of any business office and how we do it.

Network

Most of us around here think “intranet” is just a misspelling of “internet”. The idea of having a noisy, maintenance-required server in the closet is a thing of traditionals. It’s faster, cheaper and largely just as secure to store our network in the cloud (with exceptions of course). Plus we don’t mess with cords or a VPN. Rather we use Dropbox to keep us connected. Sharing is made easy and accessible with their in-the-cloud service and mobile apps. That’s right, charts and graphs in our hands at all times.

Phone System

Mobile. Period. We use Grasshopper for our virtual phone system. Give our 1-800 number (1.800.787.3006) a call and you’ll hear our company directory. You’ll be redirected to an employee’s mobile phone. Again, no cords or phones that can’t fit into your pocket. When was the last time you used a land line at home? Exactly.

Hardware

You won’t find any desktops around here; notebooks and tablets are our preference. We have a few old PC’s hanging around, but we’re partial to MacBook Pros and iPads. A dongle and Parallels is all that’s need to bridge the PC chasm.

Email

While we may prefer more collaborative means of communication, email is still the plumbing. We use Google Apps. It’s like Microsoft Exchange, only a lot cheaper. Plus, we live in Google so it only makes sense.

Calendar

Again, Google Apps fits the bill. A popular personal calendar app makes adoption and integration easy. Just don’t accidentally invite the whole team to your kid’s ballet classes.

Collaboration

Nothing beats a good old whiteboard session but apps like Jive, Basecamp, Google Chat, and Beluga have changed how people collaborate. We use each differently, some internal and some client facing. We’ve heavily adopted Beluga as a lighthearted way to passively communicate off-hours.

Music

OK, maybe not found in most offices but an essential part of our day to day. Past bouts over one person’s music dictatorship led to a democratized approach using a Mac mini, Rdio and Airfoil app. Now it’s first come, first serve and I can get my GNR Patience on every Friday.

Connectivity

Wifi ties us all together and our little Sprint 4G sticks make us all wandering wifi hotspots.

So a little insight into how we run lean and mobile here as SwellPath. Chances that our office burns down tomorrow? Minimal.  Chances we need communicate real-time with the team, take a client call on the road, or access a report on another computer or phone? Substantial.

Snow day? No excuses now.

A (Slightly) New Look

Published April 28th, 2011 SwellPath No Comments

Not redesigned, but refreshed. Either way, we’ve made some changes. We’ve listened and we’ve measured. We’ve determined what’s important to you and gave you more.

Here are some changes we’ve made:

Clean, Unified Services

The fact is, only 6% of users visit specific services pages. Even after testing, we still got little interest in the details. Thus we opted for a more streamlined and integrated way to present our offering versus a more traditional laundry list of services.

Like many agencies, our most important pages (beyond the homepage) are About, Services and Clients. It’s what you want. It’s what we focused on.

Measure Messaging

Measurement is the common thread that ties our services together. That’s it; we use data to make informed marketing decisions. That message is reinforced throughout the site.

Culture + Team

It’s not a 1-man show here, we’re a team and we like to show it off. Meet us here.

There you go – clean and to the point. Stay tuned for more changes and announcements coming this summer.

Typography SEO Cage Match – Cufón v. sIFR v. @font-face

Published March 2nd, 2011 SEO No Comments

Fonts are an important consideration for any good site design and often convey the overall tone. Similarly, text has always been at the foundation of SEO. Web fonts and typographer are yet another place where good design practices converge with optimization. Historically, there have been few options besides the dreaded image replacement technique. However, within the last 5 years viable alternatives have emerged and good options are now available; with varying degrees of drawbacks. Let’s settle the dispute the best way we know how, with a cage match.

Let’s meet our competitors.

sIFR

mr. perfect - sIFRWeighing in at an uncompressed 16kb, the heavyweight of the event is sIFR. Born in 2005, sIFR entered the arena with big expectations and didn’t let down. Beautiful typography and SEO were now finally playing nice together. However, with Flash at it’s core, sIFR was plagued by slow rendering speeds and issues with implementation and support. SIFR was in line with progressive enhancement and thus became a tool for the SEO community looking to make friends with designers. However, as load times became a variable for search + lack of Flash support on mobile, sIFR has run out of favor with both the design and SEO community. Once a pin-up, now washed up.

Cufón

macho man - CufonEnter Cufón. A javascript-based text replacement solution. No Flash required and faster rendering times made this middle-weight a worthy competitor. The main drawback (sans the legality of embedding fonts) is the lack of text highlighting. Unlike sIFR, a user cannot highlight or copy the text; more a usability issue than anything else. As a rendering engine, Cufón is only displayed to users with JavaScript, thus search engines see all that great HTML. A good juiced-up option for SEO.

@font-face

@font-faceA CSS-based approach to typography makes @font-face a new, strong competitor. Implementation is relatively painless, requiring only a few lines of CSS.  The main drawbacks are the lack consistent cross-browser support of the various font formats and font foundry licensing. Cross-browser syntax for @font-face is well documented at this point and less a concern.

The SEO Smackdown

So let’s get to the main event.

SEO - sIFR, Cufon, @font-face

sIFR comes out the gates swinging with full cross-browser support but quickly gets knocked back due to slow rendering times and heavy code. Cufón and @ font-face are pretty evenly matched but ease of implementation and selectable text give @font-face the upper hand. 

@font-face seo

 

Our Typography SEO Cage Match Winner – @font-face!

 

 


Interview: Wesley Picotte; SwellPath’s new Director of Client Services

Published September 20th, 2010 SwellPath No Comments

Wesley Picotte has joined SwellPath Interactive as Director of Client Services. He brings extensive experience in all realms of Web development and marketing and we’re excited for what he brings to the team. Wesley will drive SwellPath’s growth strategy, oversee our service offering and staff, and provide strategic leadership for accounts.

John: First off, welcome. We’re excited to have you join the team. Tell us a little about yourself and background.

Wesley: It’s great to be here. My background, lets see. My first marketing job began in 1996, where I was part of a team at Wild Oats focused on preparing the company for its IPO. After that, I held marcom positions for a software company developing mobile applications, and later for an angel investment fund investing in the telecom space. These roles provided my initial exposure to Web development and marketing, and I’ve been involved in this space ever since. I transitioned to the agency side when I joined White Horse. As Director of Media Services, I formalized the agency’s media offering by creating a sophisticated media planning, management, and measurement platform capable of delivering solutions for very large and complex organizations. That was a great experience. I set strategy for integrated brand and direct response programs for companies that include Anthem BlueCross, Columbia Sportswear, and Well Fargo. Working for clients like that, I was able to forge a lot of industry relationships and really immerse in technology and trends influencing Web development and marketing. I additionally held the role of Director for Client Services while at White Horse. I oversaw the agency’s business development team, directed new business acquisition strategy and efforts, and in the process tackled engagements across the entire spectrum of services provided by a full-service digital agency.

John: You’ve been in the digital game for a while now, where do you see the industry headed?

Wesley: That’s a big question. You could write volumes on this, but in terms of the services we provide, innovation continues to splinter audiences and marketing channels, making the marketing manager or director’s job ever more complex. Meanwhile, areas like Web analytics and media attribution continue to mature, and parity is beginning to spread across solutions. This equates to a diminishing emphasis on one technology over another and greater value on methodologies and data interpretation. I don’t mean to say that platform selection isn’t important, but the fact is that you no longer need to align with sophisticated, expensive solutions in order to achieve sophisticated measurement. You really need to know what you’re doing, though. This poses a huge opportunity for agencies like SwellPath that have been built around such methodologies, that posses experience across a wide gamut of platforms, and that understand how to plug this into digital strategies in a very concise, data-driven manner. It’s certainly a contributing factor to our rapid growth here.

John: You’ve worked on large and complex digital campaigns over the years. How has measurement played a part in your strategy and approach?

Wesley: For better or worse, granular measurement has been paramount in my approach to developing integrated marketing programs from the outset. Paid media channels are so measurable that this may not sound like much. When you’re in a room reviewing the results of a large investment with a CMO, or with a client team responsible for bottomline metrics, well, this is a huge deal. But the size of the investment is irrelevant. I cannot count how many times I’ve seen presentations from agencies containing only rudimentary performance metrics, with absolutely no insight into the true return of online marketing investments – paid media, social media, whatever. For all of those marketers out there with budgetary line items for these activities, your agency needs to be able to speak to how marketing program structure supports predefined objectives and metrics. And it’s not only about measuring well-conceived campaigns. Your website, its architecture, what’s being measured there and how, is critical. Today’s management and measurement tools can do so much, but you’d better understand why you’re measuring something. For agencies, this places a premium on the ability to educate clients about what to measure, what to react to, why, and when. You simply cannot provide strategic guidance otherwise.

John: What excites you about joining SwellPath?

Wesley: A few things, for sure. The people here are smart and excited and engaged by their work. SwellPath has a sophisticated approach to its solutions, which also says a lot about its people and fits well with how I approach things, too. This environment is data-rich. I think this combined with services designed for aggressive Website and marketing optimization positions us extremely well to provide value across the entire customer lifecycle. I’ve seen the innards of a few agencies, and for me it’s really encouraging to step into one where the client, and providing great service and value, is at the core of everything. This sounds canned, I know, but has in this case the virtue of being true. There’s an Annie Dillard quote that I think about a lot that goes, “How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives. What we do with this hour, and that one, is what we are doing.” It’s a huge motivator for me professionally and personally, and from that perspective, I really like what I see here.

Client Profile: Rejuvenation

Published August 17th, 2010 Clients No Comments

In this monthly series, we take a closer look at what’s most important here at SwellPath, our clients. This series isn’t about us or the work we do but rather all about our clients and the amazing work they’re doing. First in the Client Profile series is our long-time client, Rejuvenation.

Founded in 1977 as an architectural salvage store, Rejuvenation is America’s premier manufacturer of authentic reproduction lighting and house parts. All of Rejuvenation’s products are made-to-order via their catalog, website, and retail stores in Portland and Seattle.

We recently visited Rejuvenation’s manufacturing factory right here in the neighborhood and got a rare glimpse at the inner workings of a skilled craftsman process and a business driven by it’s core values.

Commitment to Quality

It was clear from the beginning that producing the highest quality, handcrafted products is the crux of Rejuvenation’s business . Skilled craftsmen meticulously piece together every product, with unique workstations and individual tools. Each fixture is finished by hand.

Inspiration for each piece is derived from their roots as a salvage store in the 70′s. An entire room is dedicated to restoring old light fixtures and driving new reproduction product lines. See all of the photos from our tour here.

Commitment to Sustainable Manufacturing

Rejuvenation operates its manufacturing processes according to a structure that supports sustainability and a dedication to minimizing their impact on the environment. Among their efforts, they’ve designed and implemented a closed-loop water recycling system that extracts heavy metals from the manufacturing process water for safe disposal. They also use 100% recyclable packaging materials to ship product, much of which is recycled office paper.

It’s great to see a business that understands that sustainable business practices are as great for the environment as they are economical. Read more about their footprint.

Commitment to Community

Rejuvenation also has an outstanding commitment to the local community. Ever year, they donate ten percent of their after tax profits to organizations that help support vibrant, sustainable communities. These are primarily non-profits in the areas of environmental conservation, historic preservation, the arts, and equal access to housing.

Rejuvenation’s business is built on a commitment to great products and socially responsible business practices. They are a great example of business done the right way and their retails stores are a must stop for any homeowner.

Semantic SEO: 5 Keyword Research Techniques & Tools

Published June 7th, 2010 SEO, Social Media No Comments

Semantics in search is evolving quicker than ever with the inevitable convergence of search and social. Search engines have been using latent semantic structure for a while to classify pages and uncover the meaning of a user’s query. However, semantics is no more transparent than it is in social content and the relatively recent indexing and inclusion of social content unveils an evolved direction from the search engines.

With keyword research as the foundation of SEO; incorporating a more semantic approach is essential and also effective to find variations and relationships of keyword groups to drive optimization and IA. Extracting meaning from keywords and additionally identifying variations to drive your SEO strategy takes time and experience. Here are 5 semantic keyword research techniques and tools:

1) Social Media Monitoring

Most marketers use some social media monitoring app to track brand or competitive mentions. For keyword research though, it’s just as valuable. We use Jive’s Market Engagement, formerly Filtrbox (full disclosure, Jive Software is a client) for ongoing keyword research. Trackur and Radian6 are 2 other popular monitoring tools.

Tracking your keywords will help to build a conversation environment and emerge other uses and variations. Jive Market Engagement is great because it shows you the conversation cloud around your terms, or terms most likely to appear with your keywords.

2) Tags

Tags are a way of classifying information, but for keyword research it’s a focus group. As users tag their social bookmarks, they’re essentially telling you how they would classify and structure your website.

Let’s use Foursquare as an example. There are over 4,000 Fouraquare bookmarks on Delicious and probably 5 – 10x as many tags (multiple tags per URL). Spending a bit of time pursuing user tags can returns some interesting results:

Geolocation, community, game, hyperlocal, ridesharing, application, geo-locator, lbs, social media, social media location, blackberry, gps, tools…

Not only can you look at tags but users’ descriptions about the domain -

“…explore their environments using cell phones.”

“…no more location updates. Yay.”

“…and also a game.”

This might be straightforward to some but for a marketer trying to position their offering, this is gold. Rinse and repeat for other social bookmarking sites.

3) Trending

Keywords rise and fall with the advent of new spaces and products. Understanding when to optimize around a rising keyword/topic is key to positioning your page in front of the storm so to speak. Here are some tools we use for trending purposes.

TweetVolume – Compare trends and popularity of keywords on Twitter.

Ice Rocket - View how often a term has been mentioned in social media over time.

BlogPulse – Automated trend discovery system for blogs. It analyzes and reports on daily activity in the blogosphere.

Trendrr – Tracks the popularity and trends across a variety of inputs, ranging from social networks, to blog buzz and video views downloads.

4) Social Search

Sometimes, simple one-off searches can provide the most insight into semantic keyword variations and synonyms.

OpenBook – With Facebook’s new privacy settings, it’s all open. Search FB updates for keywords and connections.

Twitter Search – Search terms in Twitter mentions. Be sure to use their search operators to refine and target searches.

5) Cool Social Tools

Here are some other random tools we find useful to derive keywords from social media.

Addict-o-matic – Aggregate tool that searches sites for the latest news, blog posts, videos and images pertaining to a specific topic or keyword.

Backtweets – Search for tweets linking to any url, and setup email alerts with via the advanced search page.

MentionMap – Great visualization tool that pulls in hashtags as well as relationships between tweeps.

Flash SEO: A Presentation

Published January 27th, 2010 SEO No Comments

Flash Optimization (SEO)
View more presentations from SwellPath.

Mobile & Search Converge = Mobile SEO

Published December 4th, 2009 Mobile, SEO 1 Comment

mobile-seoThe growth and evolution of mobile devices inevitably leads to convergence with other technologies and disciplines. One such being search. The convergence of mobile technology and search technology creates complications and considerations for the usability of website content.

A shift in user behavior and technology has led to the evolution of search. Mobile platforms create complications to web searches. Search engines have adjusted to this shift; offering mobile versions of their products that address some of the limitations of mobile technology.

However, to ensure website content can be found and usable, mobile SEO best practices should be utilized. First and foremost, heavy interactive websites (graphics and rich media) have historically created issues with mobile platforms. While Adobe’s Flash Player 10.1 release is looking to change that, it’s far from solved. As such, content needs to be mobile friendly which that means limiting rich media.

If you don’t have content that is supported, you have bigger fish to fry before considering mobile SEO.

Mobile Website Development

As with all SEO, the code is one of the most critical factors and major hurdles for optimizing a mobile website for search engines. One of the common and most used practices for mobile SEO is still building a mobile website counterpart for your standard website. This isn’t always necessary but still a best practice.

For most mobile websites, avoid WAP/WML (Wireless Markup Language) and make use of a more familiar markup language, XHTML. Most mobile browsers these days can handle XHTML. Additionally, common HTML elements are supported such as body, head, title, meta, H1, H2.

Mobile web development is a bigger topic than we’re tackling here, check out W3C’s Mobile Best Practices and the XHTML Mobile Phone tag list.

Mobile SEO Best Practices

As you would for your standard website, developed a list of keywords and map them throughout your site for targeting. Certain mobile tags and attributes should be used to create a mobile search-friendly website. Utilize keywords via the available SEO elements such as H1, H2, alt tags, etc.

The size of a web page is an important aspect to consider when designing mobile-friendly pages. Bandwidth is still an issue, thus keep it simple. Under 20KB is best practice.

W3C has a great tool for helping validate your mobile site – W3C Mobile OK Validator.

Mobile Website Accessibility

Similar to accessibility in standard web development, mobile sites need to be found, crawled and indexed. As such, a mobile sitemap should be developed to assist mobile search engine bots.

Mobile search engines crawl and index sites that are specifically developed for mobiles platforms. As such, they require a mobile XML Sitemap, which adheres to the Sitemaps Protocol with a specific <mobile:mobile> tag.

This is a unique XML sitemap from your standard website XML sitemap and requires a unique location. Anytime you have multiple XML sitemaps, including mobile, you need to have Sitemap Index file to support them.

Once you’ve created a mobile XML sitemap, submit it to Google Webmaster Tools and Yahoo mobile site submission as you would a standard website.

Developing a stand alone mobile site isn’t always essential for your site content to be found on smartphones, however it is essential to consider mobile SEO best practices if you want your site content to be found and remain usable on mobile platforms.

Advanced SEO Services: 5 Key Methods

Published September 9th, 2009 SEO No Comments

SEO isn’t rocket science; best practices are easy to learn and implement with a little practice. However, SEO goes way beyond simple best practices to include strategies and techniques only realized and utilized through experience. Furthermore, advanced SEO (in my opinion) is the practice of successful and proven techniques coupled with methodologies that support larger business objectives.

These are in sense, less of specific tactics as they are an approach for providing advanced SEO services.

1) Integrate Analytics

triangleData-driven decisions is our mantra. Whether it’s Google Analytics, Omniture or WebTrends, it doesn’t matter. Just as long as it’s configured or has the appropriate features/applications/components to provide SEO intelligence. Analytics should be used identify opportunities and weaknesses of a site.

Site search, apart from functionality is a feedback tool, providing insight into what user’s are searching for on a site. Analytics is the key to mining this data from your site’s users and incorporating it into an SEO keyword plan.

Additionally, sections of a site should be analyzed independently to determine their overall impact in terms of driving organic traffic; including a blog, categories and any deeper content. Understanding of historic data gives insight into where the site has been and where it’s capable of going.

2) Monitoring & Measurement

Most SEO specialists have some sort of measurement system in place for measuring impact; from ranking positions to organic traffic. However, monitoring and measurement should go beyond a simple aggregate of monthly organic traffic to measure campaigns from every angle; including segmentation of organic traffic and long tail impact.

All online marketers, especially SEO specialists should be well versed in the theory of the long-tail; whereas most traffic consists of infrequent and rather unique search queries. The majority of keyword traffic lies in the long tail, thus every SEO strategy should focus on tapping into long tail traffic. As such, that strategy also needs to be monitored and quantified.

Organic traffic should be segmented in the following buckets: branded, head keywords and long tail keywords. Additionally, a few filters, customer reports, and some reg ex can easily configure Google Analytics to track SEO efforts as this level; providing insight into the true impact of SEO.

3) SEO to Compliment Design

SEO often and regularly conflicts with design. This is most often the case with bigger brands where branding and style guidelines are integral and more often than not, required. Advanced SEO techniques offer alternatives to such heavy design (images & rich media) rather than the normal contradictory approach.

Simply suggesting removing Flash for instance, is no recommendation. Flash has it’s place even as SEO unfriendly as it may be. There is a balance between user experience/branding and SEO; advanced SEOers know when to offer the middle ground.

4) Business Analysis

Ok, this isn’t necessarily “seo”, but it is important that SEO specialists integrate a deep level of business understanding into their approach. Where does SEO fit into the overall marketing mix? What are the KPIs beyond just organic traffic? How does your sales cycle map to your SEO strategy?

It’s important to understand more than simply just rankings; you need to know if SEO is helping your business succeed. An advanced SEO approach will need to make recommendations regarding budgets and resources; prioritizing SEO against other mediums and needs.

5) On-site & Off-site Plan

This “catch all” method really just includes the other major components of advanced seo – content development, landing page optimization and link baiting. SEO is nothing without the off-site factors (external backlinks) and vice a versa with the on-site factors.

A thorough SEO strategy includes both an on-site and off-site strategy and most importantly how the two strategies overlap.

Of course, our jobs don’t stop once a user hits the site; it actually just begins. SEO and online marketing aren’t just about specific variables and tactics but rather a bigger picture of how resources, techniques and technology align with overarching business objectives.

Display v. Search – The Last Ad Model Bias

Published September 3rd, 2009 Paid Search, SEO No Comments

display v. searchNow many would argue that it’s not display v. search but rather the synergies achieved when both mediums work together. Search marketing currently comprises more than one-half of all interactive dollars, and will remain the biggest format through 2014. Most ad networks don’t love that stat and for obvious reason. Their response has been that they receive little to no conversion credit and thus a diminishing media budget.

The issue with display ad ROI measurement is the inability to assign a quantifiable value, which some believe results in a disproportionate value being assigned to search, otherwise know as the last ad model.

“The current “last ad” model attributes 100% of the credit for a conversion to the last ad seen or clicked. This is the current standard the industry has relied on to justify their digital media spend. The problem with this approach is that it ignores the contributions of any previous ads that led the customer down the road to that conversion.”

Source: Atlas Institute

Of course, the Atlas Institute (Microsoft) has been pushing their Engagement Mapping approach or the ability to measure cross-channel impact, but details into their technology are still blurry. Regardless of the technical ability to measure (another post altogether), there has been little credit given the role of search throughout the entire conversion funnel or search’s ability to generate demand.

While clearly there is somewhat of a “halo effect” between display and search whereas users that have been exposed to display ads are more likely to click on a paid advertisement – note case study by iCrossing. However, many mediums (that can’t all be measured) can be attributed with creating greater upstream demand; mediums such as TV ads, radio, billboards and yes, display ads. However, no credit is given to search as vehicle to drive awareness and demand in the last ad model.

A common argument is that the majority of sponsored search clicks are simply navigational; assuming that sponsored search is not bringing in new prospects but simply delivering people to a URL they are seeking. I would argue that savvy search marketer understand the importance of branded traffic but focus the majority of SEM efforts on non-branded traffic and new segments to target – essentially on “research” type queries higher in the conversion funnel. As such, search is not only the “last step” in a purchase funnel, but one integral throughout.

An example given by Atlas is one that looks at users searching for basketball shoes. A user compiles their research for basketball shoes, decides to buy Nike, and returns to a search engine and searches “Nike basketball shoes”. They state that 100% of the credit is given to the “nike baseketball shoes” and search had little to do with the research but was simply navigational.

I would argue that a “basketball shoes” search query is a research query whereas a user is comparing brands, prices and reviews and users find this type of data more often than not, online and specifically via search engines. Now display ads can clearly support the brand but are not the main vehicle for research or driving demand. Additionally, there are numerous retailers selling Nike basketball shoes, thus a users’ intent is possibly to find where to buy and not necessarily navigate to Nike.com.

The point is that search is credited for capturing users towards the end of the sales cycle but is also ideal for conducting research and generating awareness, something display ads try to claim the majority of credit for. Other mediums certainly have an impact on demand and search and should be a part of the online marketing mix. However, mediums need to be evaluated based on the industry and data at hand; data that needs to be accurate and opaque.

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